Is sausages countable or uncountable?
Índice
- Is sausages countable or uncountable?
- Is meat countable or uncountable?
- Is list is countable or uncountable?
- Is Hot Dog countable or uncountable?
- Is paper countable or uncountable?
- When to use the uncountable form of sausage?
- What kind of meat is in a sausage?
- When to use a countable and uncountable noun?
- Is it normal to say two tubes of sausage?
Is sausages countable or uncountable?
(countable) A sausage is a piece of food that is made of chicken, pork and other meats. Sausages are mass-produced in factories.
Is meat countable or uncountable?
(uncountable) Meat is the muscle of animals that we eat. Beef, chicken, and pork are kinds of meat. I am a vegetarian.
Is list is countable or uncountable?
Common Uncountable Nouns: Word List.
Is Hot Dog countable or uncountable?
(countable) A hot dog is a type of sausage, most often a weiner or frankfurter. For lunch, I had an all-beef hot dog with ketchup and mustard.
Is paper countable or uncountable?
(uncountable) Paper is a material for writing and drawing on and is made from wood pulp. A notebook is made from sheets of paper. She made a paper airplane. (countable) A paper is a newspaper, magazine, newsletter, etc.
When to use the uncountable form of sausage?
- There is probably more tendency to use the uncountable form when referring to large or special sausages that would not normally be served several at a time. Referring to "two sausages" is fine and completely normal.
What kind of meat is in a sausage?
- ( countable) A sausage is a piece of food that is made of chicken, pork and other meats. Sausages are mass-produced in factories.
When to use a countable and uncountable noun?
- I'd be thankful if someone explains when I should use sausage as a countable noun and when as an uncountable one. Both are correct, but the connotation is different. I like sausage. Indicates that you like the food in general.
Is it normal to say two tubes of sausage?
- Referring to "two sausages" is fine and completely normal. Each individual "tube", as you call it, is just "a sausage". You would never normally say "two tubes of sausage" or "two sticks of sausage" or anything similar.